Former Wallabies coach Eddie Jones retains the backing of the English Rugby Football Union despite his side’s poor fifth-placed finish in the Six Nations.
Ireland were crowned Grand Slam champions with a conclusive 24-15 victory at Twickenham on Saturday that condemned the hosts to a third consecutive defeat and their worst tournament performance since 1987.
A review into England’s results that have plunged England into crisis began on Wednesday morning with RFU chief executive Steve Brown attending the initial meeting between Jones and his coaching staff.
As is customary after each tournament, Jones must present to the RFU board and also appear before the Professional Game Board, which represents the English game’s various stakeholders.
While mourning the collapse in results, Brown insists Australian Jones remains the right man to lead England into the 2019 World Cup.
“Eddie and his coaches have my confidence and the measure of how good they are and can be will be how they respond to these tough times,” Brown said.
“The results in the Six Nations were not what we wanted, not what we expected and there is no attempt by us to dress this up.
“We wanted to do significantly better and we didn’t. We’re disappointed with the decline, no question about that. Nobody would want to go from winning the Six Nations to fifth.
“It’s worth reflecting that Eddie has an 86 per cent win record with England. You don’t become a bad coach or team overnight. But we have to learn and have to improve.”
Brown rejected former World Cup-winning coach Sir Clive Woodward’s claim that England have stagnated and defended the decision to award Jones a two-year contract extension in January, stressing that the terms of the deal are subject to performance at the 2019 World Cup.
England’s record before the Six Nations stood at a remarkable 22 wins from 23 Tests only to fall to comprehensive losses to Scotland, France and Ireland with a summer tour to South Africa looming.
“Maybe we were not quite as good as our results were showing before, but we are not as bad as fifth in the Six Nations. That’s an important point,” Brown said.


